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Precious dust : the American gold rush era, 1848-1900 (1994)


Author: Marks, Paula Mitchell, 1951-
Subject: Gold mines and mining; Gold Rush; Goudmijnen; Goldrausch
Publisher: New York : W. Morrow
Language: English
Digitizing sponsor: Internet Archive
Book contributor: Internet Archive
Collection: printdisabled; inlibrary; browserlending; internetarchivebooks; marincountyfreelibrary; americana

Full catalog record: MARCXML

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Description

Includes bibliographical references (p. 425-435) and index

"The age of gold" -- Overland to California -- Sea travels and California wanderings -- One daunting trail after another -- Bound for the far North -- Life in the diggings -- "Cities of the magic lantern" -- Self, society, and the "battle of life" -- "No law but miners' law" -- Natives and strangers -- Home ties -- Gender and gold -- Perspectives

Precious Dust traces the experience of the hundreds of thousands of goldseekers who converged upon the American and Canadian West during America's great gold-rush era, 1848-1900

Beginning with the initial stampedes to California's "mother lode" country and continuing on to the zealous pursuit of gold mixed with sand on the beaches of Nome, Alaska, author Paula Mitchell Marks explores the various facets of the goldseekers' adventures: what propelled them westward, how they lived, how they met the myriad challenges of the journey and search, what kept them going or caused them to turn back, what sense they made of the whole enterprise

As the book shows, the rushes provided the major impetus for the initial development of western regions in the mid- to late nineteenth century, as well as a safety valve for restless dreamers and a laboratory for the American democratic experiment. Marks clearly reveals the tensions inherent in nineteenth-century American culture - the differences between pre-industrial ideas of success and later ones, between the American myth of abundance for all and the reality, between virulent racism and a democratic sense of fair play, between romantic appreciation of the land and exploitation of it, and between the American celebration of individualism and freedom and two quite different challenges to it: the need for community commitment and the demands of a changing economic and social order


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Selected metadata

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Identifier-access: http://www.archive.org/details/preciousdustamer00mark
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Bookplateleaf: 0004
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